Commentary

Will 'Breitbart' Become A TV Network?

Thinking of starting a new TV network? Better have lots of resources, possibly a proven advertising website track record and a couple of billion dollars hanging around.

Various reports have
suggested a conservative-minded news organization could launch a new TV Network. The likely candidates could be Sinclair Broadcast Group, a Trump-backed effort, or even Breitbart
News.

Sinclair has said publicly it isn’t interested, preferring to keep producing and growing its local TV station newscasts. A couple of weeks ago, Trump TV Network -- a virtual
video PR site on YouTube -- was of note, for a day or so.

Now that Trump chief strategist Steve Bannon is back with Breitbart News, the thinking is that it will look to expand. Does
that include building a TV network?

Still, these are new times. Starting a TV-video network doesn’t necessary mean a TV-video network needs to be ad-supported. Former Fox News host Glenn Beck started
TheBlaze in 2011 as a paid subscription/ad-supported TV hybrid site before moving on to some traditional pay TV providers.

To make a big splash, many believe getting into the ranks of a
CNN, Fox News Channel or MSNBC is key. Recently, AT&T had been rumored, upon completion of its deal for Time Warner, to sell off CNN. But AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson has said there is
little consideration for selling off the prized asset.

Analysts say CNN would come with a hefty $10 billion price tag. Not sure whether Robert Mercer, a billionaire hedge fund manager, and the Mercer family -- a big Breitbart News backer
-- is even considering this course.

Plus, a recent quick observation of Breitbart's home page showed scant advertising -- a small right-side LowerMyBills.com ad, and in the key header
position on the site, an ad for the Gaijin Entertainment video game “War Thunder.”

Does this sound familiar? One of the first things Bannon tweeted out upon his leaving the
Trump Administration: #War.

Yes, a predictable role for any publishing executive chairman: Playing up to the sponsors. Well, that’s a start.

The answer to the question posed in your headline, Wayne, is "not likely". Of course, I could be wrong, but it's hard to see this far out an organization obtaining the kinds of clearences required---either TV stations or cable systems---to operate on a national basis. As for advertising---forget it. I'm afraid that Breitbart will have to continue soldiering on a an online venture, though how it makes any money is beyond me ---except by charging its viewers for what they now get, mostly and in a less taxing format to watch, from the Fox News Channel.